Seccombe and Arber, comps. Elizabethan Sonnets. 1904.
ChlorisSonnet XIV. Mournful Amyntas, thou didst pine with care
William Smith (fl. 1596)M
Because the Fates, by their untimely doom,
Of life bereft thy loving P
When thy love’s Spring did first begin to bloom.
My care doth countervail that care of thine;
And yet my C
My hopes, still hoping, hopeless now repine;
For living, She doth add to me but death.
Thy P
My C
Thus doth my woe as great as thine appear;
Though sundry accents both our sorrows move.
Thy swan-like Song did shew thy dying anguish:
These weeping Truce-men shew I living languish.